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Bellows Falls station

Bellows Falls station is an Amtrak intercity rail station located in the Bellows Falls village of Rockingham, Vermont, United States. The station is served by the single daily round trip of the Washington, D.C.St. Albans Vermonter. It has a single side platform adjacent to the single track of the New England Central Railroad (ex-Central Vermont) mainline.

Bellows Falls, VT
The station (left) and the former Railway Express Agency building in 2015
General information
Location54 Depot Street
Bellows Falls, Vermont
United States
Coordinates43°08′11″N 72°26′41″W / 43.136407°N 72.444657°W / 43.136407; -72.444657
Owned byGreen Mountain Railroad
Line(s)New England Central Railroad
Green Mountain Railroad
Platforms1 side platform
Tracks1
Connections The Current: 2, 53, 55, 57
Greyhound Lines
Other information
Station codeAmtrak: BLF
History
OpenedJanuary 1, 1849
September 30, 1972
July 18, 1989
ClosedSeptember 6, 1966
April 6, 1987
Rebuilt1851; 1922–1923
Passengers
FY 2021895[1] (Amtrak)
Services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Brattleboro Vermonter Claremont
toward St. Albans
Former services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Brattleboro Montrealer
1972–1987, 1989–1995
White River Junction
toward Montreal
Preceding station Central Vermont Railway Following station
Brattleboro
toward New London
Main Line Charlestown
toward St. Johns
Preceding station Rutland Railroad Following station
Rockingham Rouses Point–​Bellows Falls Terminus
Chester
toward Montreal
Green Mountain Flyer / Mount Royal Keene
toward Boston

Three railroads—the Sullivan County Railroad, Cheshire Railroad, and Rutland and Burlington Railroad—were completed to Bellows Falls in 1849, followed by the Vermont Valley Railroad in 1851. This placed Bellows Falls at the junction of two major trunk lines: BostonBurlington via Rutland and Fitchburg, and New York–Montreal via New Haven and White River Junction. A two-story brick station was constructed in 1851 at the junction of the four railroads. After a number of mergers and leases over the next half-century, service was consolidated into three major railroads by 1900. The Boston and Maine Railroad (B&M) and Central Vermont (CV) ran north–south service through Bellows Falls, while the B&M and Rutland Railroad collaborated on east–west traffic on the Boston–Montreal route via Bellows Falls.

Much of the downtown area, including the train station, was destroyed in a 1921 fire; it was replaced in 1922–23 with a one-story brick building on the same site. Passenger service declined over the following decades, with all passenger service to Bellows Falls ended in 1966. In 1972, newly-created Amtrak restored the Washington, D.C.–Montreal Montrealer. Bellows Falls was served by the Montrealer from 1972 to 1987, and 1989 to 1995; since 1995 it has been served by the Vermonter.

The station building and a circa-1880 Railway Express Agency (REA) building nearby were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as part of the Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District. The former REA building houses the offices of the Green Mountain Railroad.

History Edit

Initial railroads Edit

 
The 1852-built Bellows Falls station, circa 1915

The village of Bellows Falls was a transportation hub even before railroads: the 1785 construction of a bridge across the Connecticut River made it a stop for stagecoach lines, and the 1802 completion of the Bellows Falls Canal provided industrial power and a safe water route bypassing the nearby falls.[2] In 1849, three railroads met at Bellows Falls. The Sullivan County Railroad opened from Bellows Falls to Charlestown, New Hampshire on January 1, 1849, and to Windsor, Vermont the next month, where it connected to the Vermont Central Railroad.[3]: 170  Around the same time, the Cheshire Railroad completed its line from South Ashburnham, Massachusetts (where it met the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad) to the New Hampshire side of Bellows Falls; the bridge across the Connecticut River was completed that June.[2][4] The Rutland and Burlington Railroad was completed from Bellows Falls to its namesake towns on December 18, 1849; it met the previous two railroads at the north end of the island formed by the canal.[3]: 41 

The Vermont Valley Railroad opened from Bellows Falls (including a tunnel under the town square) to Brattleboro, Vermont in 1851.[2][3]: 170  This placed Bellows Falls at the junction of two major trunk lines: Boston–Burlington via Rutland and Fitchburg, and New York–Montreal via New Haven and White River Junction.[2] Boston–Montreal traffic also passed through Bellows Falls until around 1853, when the Vermont Central began using the Northern Railroad as its main Boston connection.[3]: 249 [5]: 271  The railroads constructed a two-story brick station in the southeast corner of the railroad junction on the island.[2] The island also housed freight houses, a roundhouse, and other railroad structures.[2][6] A one-story brick Railway Express Agency (REA) building with a cupola on its roof was built next to the station between 1878 and 1885.[7]

Mergers Edit

A series of acquisitions and leases resulted placed the Sullivan County Railroad, Vermont Valley Railroad, and Rutland Railroad (successor to the Rutland and Burlington) under the control of the Vermont Central by the end of 1870.[3]: 173  These moves left the Vermont Central deep in debt; it was reorganized as the Central Vermont Railroad (CV) in 1873. By 1880, still struggling, the CV leased the Sullivan County and Vermont Valley to the Connecticut River Railroad (with the CV retaining trackage rights); the CV itself would be leased by the Boston and Maine Railroad (B&M) in 1893.[3]: 173  The Cheshire Railroad was acquired in 1890 by the Fitchburg Railroad, which was in turn leased by the B&M in 1900.[3]: 61  The CV canceled its lease of the Rutland Railroad in 1896.[3]: 173  The B&M and CV ran north–south service through Bellows Falls, while the B&M and Rutland collaborated on east–west traffic on the Boston–Montreal route via Bellows Falls.[2] The station building was renovated in 1891.[8][9]

The second station Edit

 
The REA office during the 1927 floods

On December 21, 1921, much of the station was destroyed by a fire that began in the station's kitchen.[10] It was replaced in 1922-23 with a one-story brick building on the same site. Construction was handled by H. Wales Lines of Meriden, Connecticut.[11] The rectangular building has three polygonal pavilions - one each on the sides facing the tracks, and a larger seven-sided one facing the junction - to provide additional interior space. The larger pavilion, with its panoramic view of the Connecticut River, housed a newsstand and restaurant; the pavilion facing the CV/B&M line houses the agent's office.[2][7] A canopy wrapped around the station building and onto the REA building.[7] The new building opened on March 10, 1923.[12][note 1] The Great Vermont Flood of 1927 left the station under 4 feet (1.2 m) of water.[2]

All passenger service on the Rutland Railroad - including the Boston sections of the Green Mountain Flyer and Mount Royal via Bellows Falls - ended on June 26, 1953.[3]: 44  (Freight service on the Rutland Railroad ceased in 1961; three years later, the Green Mountain Railroad took over the Rutland–Bellows Falls line.)[3]: 45  The B&M discontinued passenger service on the Cheshire on May 18, 1958 - part of massive service cuts that day.[13][3]: 62  Passenger service to Bellows Falls ended on September 6, 1966, when the Montrealer was cut.[3]: 175  The canopy was soon removed.[7]

Amtrak era Edit

 
Bellows Falls station in 1978

Amtrak took over intercity passenger rail service in the United States on May 1, 1971. Vermont was not initially served by Amtrak, as initial routes were limited to a "basic system" primarily consisting of intercity routes still in operation at that time.[14]: 32  1972 legislation to add international service resulted in the restoration of the Montrealer on September 29, 1972, restoring rail service through Vermont.[15] The waiting room was reopened for Amtrak passengers, but services like ticketing were not provided; the B&M used the baggage room for storage.[7] After the REA ceased operations in the 1970s, the Green Mountain Railroad began using the REA office as its freight office; it also maintains the station building.[7]

The Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 16, 1982.[16] It included three railroad structures as contributing properties: the station building, the REA office, and a circa-1860 Cheshire Railroad freight house (which was later demolished around 2000).[7] In 1984, the Green Mountain Railroad began operating excursion service from Bellows Falls.[2]

The Montrealer was suspended north of Springfield, Massachusetts, on April 6, 1987, because of deteriorating track conditions on the B&M-owned section of the CV mainline between Brattleboro and Windsor, Vermont, as well as the Connecticut River Line in Massachusetts.[17] After National Railroad Passenger Corp. v. Boston & Maine Corp. upheld Amtrak's right to seize the Vermont section and resell it to the CV, the Montrealer resumed service on July 18, 1989.[18] On April 2, 1995, the overnight Montrealer was replaced with the daytime Vermonter, with its northbound terminus truncated to St. Albans. The station has been served by the single daily round trip of the Vermonter since then.[14]

The station was used as a filming location for the 1999 movie The Cider House Rules. Writer John Irving commented that "Indeed, the Bellows Falls train station and its attendant buildings showed all the usual signs of neglect; it required only some period automobiles, and of course the steam engine and vintage passenger cars, to look like St. Cloud's, Maine, in the 1940s."[19] In January 2020, the town of Rockingham considered purchasing the poorly-maintained station building from the Green Mountain Railroad for $120,000.[20] This was soon scaled back to a $12,000 evaluation.[21] In March 2020, the town applied for an equally-sized federal grant for the evaluation.[22] In December 2021, the village Board of Trustees endorsed an application for a federal grant to cover $100,000 of the $250,000 purchase price.[23] In March 2022, town voters approved spending $75,000 to purchase the station.[24] In April 2022, the town select board approved an application for a $1.8 million federal earmark to partially fund a $4 million renovation, planned for 2024–25.[25] The town won a $200,000 state grant, to be used along with the $75,000 to purchase the station, in June 2022.[26]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Great American Stations and the National Register for Historical Places nomination form wrongly date the fire and station opening to 1922.[2][7]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Amtrak Fact Sheet, Fiscal Year 2021: State of Vermont" (PDF). Amtrak. August 2022. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Bellows Falls, VT (BLF)". Great American Stations. Amtrak.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Lindsell, Robert M. (2000). The Rail Lines of Northern New England. Branch Line Press. ISBN 978-0-942147-06-3.
  4. ^ Karr, Ronald Dale (2017). The Rail Lines of Southern New England (2 ed.). Branch Line Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-942147-12-4.
  5. ^ Harlow, Alvin Fay (1946). Steelways of New England. Creative Age Press.
  6. ^ "Bellows Falls, Town of Rockingham". Atlas of Windham County, Vermont. F.W. Beers & Co. 1869 – via Ward Maps.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Henry, Hugh H. (March 25, 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form". Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District. National Park Service.
  8. ^ "All over the state". Burlington Weekly Free Press. February 27, 1891. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "General Vermont News". Burlington Free Press. July 17, 1891. p. 2 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ "Railroad Station Burns". St. Albans Weekly Messenger. December 29, 1921. p. 6. Retrieved May 12, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "New Union Station Nears Completion". Brattleboro Reformer. February 15, 1923. p. 4. Retrieved May 12, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "Re-Open Station". Burlington Free Press. March 16, 1923. p. 2. Retrieved May 12, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ Humphrey, Thomas J.; Clark, Norton D. (1985). Boston's Commuter Rail: The First 150 Years. Boston Street Railway Association. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-685-41294-7.
  14. ^ a b Solomon, Brian (2004). Amtrak. Saint Paul, Minnesota: MBI. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-7603-1765-5.
  15. ^ Thoms, William E. (1973). "Amtrak Revisited: The 1972 Amendments to the Rail Passenger Service Act" (PDF). Transportation Law Journal. 5: 143.
  16. ^ "National Register Information System – Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District (#82001706)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  17. ^ "Amtrak Suspends a Montreal Train". The New York Times. May 7, 1987.
  18. ^ Lavin, Carl (July 24, 1989). "Amtrak Journal; In New England, an Old Friend Is Back on Track". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Irving, John (1999). My Movie Business. New York: Ballantine Books. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-345-44130-0.
  20. ^ Smallheer, Susan (January 8, 2020). "Rockingham ponders buying train station". Brattleboro Reformer.
  21. ^ Smallheer, Susan (January 22, 2020). "Bellows Falls train station request scaled back". Brattleboro Reformer.
  22. ^ Smallheer, Susan (March 23, 2020). "Town to submit train station grant application". Brattleboro Reformer.
  23. ^ Smallheer, Susan (December 27, 2021). "Bellows Falls trustees endorse plan to buy train station". Brattleboro Reformer. Retrieved December 31, 2021.
  24. ^ Smallheer, Susan (March 2, 2022). "Rockingham elects Zimmer, Cowan, Kibbe, Lambert; train station purchase, cannabis approved". Brattleboro Reformer. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  25. ^ Smallheer, Susan (April 7, 2022). "Rockingham approves grant application for Bellows Falls train station project". Brattleboro Reformer. Retrieved April 19, 2022.
  26. ^ Smallheer, Susan (June 20, 2022). "Rockingham gets first big train station grant". Brattleboro Reformer. Retrieved June 27, 2022.

External links Edit

  • Bellows Falls Train Station Redevelopment Project
  • Bellows Falls, VT – Amtrak
  • Bellows Falls, VT – Station history at Great American Stations (Amtrak)
  • Greyhound – Bellows Falls

bellows, falls, station, amtrak, intercity, rail, station, located, bellows, falls, village, rockingham, vermont, united, states, station, served, single, daily, round, trip, washington, albans, vermonter, single, side, platform, adjacent, single, track, engla. Bellows Falls station is an Amtrak intercity rail station located in the Bellows Falls village of Rockingham Vermont United States The station is served by the single daily round trip of the Washington D C St Albans Vermonter It has a single side platform adjacent to the single track of the New England Central Railroad ex Central Vermont mainline Bellows Falls VTThe station left and the former Railway Express Agency building in 2015General informationLocation54 Depot StreetBellows Falls VermontUnited StatesCoordinates43 08 11 N 72 26 41 W 43 136407 N 72 444657 W 43 136407 72 444657Owned byGreen Mountain RailroadLine s New England Central RailroadGreen Mountain RailroadPlatforms1 side platformTracks1ConnectionsThe Current 2 53 55 57 Greyhound LinesOther informationStation codeAmtrak BLFHistoryOpenedJanuary 1 1849 September 30 1972 July 18 1989ClosedSeptember 6 1966 April 6 1987Rebuilt1851 1922 1923PassengersFY 2021895 1 Amtrak ServicesPreceding station Amtrak Following stationBrattleborotoward Washington D C Vermonter Claremonttoward St AlbansFormer servicesPreceding station Amtrak Following stationBrattleborotoward Washington D C Montrealer1972 1987 1989 1995 White River Junctiontoward MontrealPreceding station Central Vermont Railway Following stationBrattleborotoward New London Main Line Charlestowntoward St JohnsPreceding station Rutland Railroad Following stationRockinghamtoward Rouses Point Rouses Point Bellows Falls TerminusChestertoward Montreal Green Mountain Flyer Mount Royal Keenetoward BostonThree railroads the Sullivan County Railroad Cheshire Railroad and Rutland and Burlington Railroad were completed to Bellows Falls in 1849 followed by the Vermont Valley Railroad in 1851 This placed Bellows Falls at the junction of two major trunk lines Boston Burlington via Rutland and Fitchburg and New York Montreal via New Haven and White River Junction A two story brick station was constructed in 1851 at the junction of the four railroads After a number of mergers and leases over the next half century service was consolidated into three major railroads by 1900 The Boston and Maine Railroad B amp M and Central Vermont CV ran north south service through Bellows Falls while the B amp M and Rutland Railroad collaborated on east west traffic on the Boston Montreal route via Bellows Falls Much of the downtown area including the train station was destroyed in a 1921 fire it was replaced in 1922 23 with a one story brick building on the same site Passenger service declined over the following decades with all passenger service to Bellows Falls ended in 1966 In 1972 newly created Amtrak restored the Washington D C Montreal Montrealer Bellows Falls was served by the Montrealer from 1972 to 1987 and 1989 to 1995 since 1995 it has been served by the Vermonter The station building and a circa 1880 Railway Express Agency REA building nearby were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as part of the Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District The former REA building houses the offices of the Green Mountain Railroad Contents 1 History 1 1 Initial railroads 1 2 Mergers 1 3 The second station 1 4 Amtrak era 2 Notes 3 References 4 External linksHistory EditInitial railroads Edit The 1852 built Bellows Falls station circa 1915The village of Bellows Falls was a transportation hub even before railroads the 1785 construction of a bridge across the Connecticut River made it a stop for stagecoach lines and the 1802 completion of the Bellows Falls Canal provided industrial power and a safe water route bypassing the nearby falls 2 In 1849 three railroads met at Bellows Falls The Sullivan County Railroad opened from Bellows Falls to Charlestown New Hampshire on January 1 1849 and to Windsor Vermont the next month where it connected to the Vermont Central Railroad 3 170 Around the same time the Cheshire Railroad completed its line from South Ashburnham Massachusetts where it met the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad to the New Hampshire side of Bellows Falls the bridge across the Connecticut River was completed that June 2 4 The Rutland and Burlington Railroad was completed from Bellows Falls to its namesake towns on December 18 1849 it met the previous two railroads at the north end of the island formed by the canal 3 41 The Vermont Valley Railroad opened from Bellows Falls including a tunnel under the town square to Brattleboro Vermont in 1851 2 3 170 This placed Bellows Falls at the junction of two major trunk lines Boston Burlington via Rutland and Fitchburg and New York Montreal via New Haven and White River Junction 2 Boston Montreal traffic also passed through Bellows Falls until around 1853 when the Vermont Central began using the Northern Railroad as its main Boston connection 3 249 5 271 The railroads constructed a two story brick station in the southeast corner of the railroad junction on the island 2 The island also housed freight houses a roundhouse and other railroad structures 2 6 A one story brick Railway Express Agency REA building with a cupola on its roof was built next to the station between 1878 and 1885 7 Mergers Edit A series of acquisitions and leases resulted placed the Sullivan County Railroad Vermont Valley Railroad and Rutland Railroad successor to the Rutland and Burlington under the control of the Vermont Central by the end of 1870 3 173 These moves left the Vermont Central deep in debt it was reorganized as the Central Vermont Railroad CV in 1873 By 1880 still struggling the CV leased the Sullivan County and Vermont Valley to the Connecticut River Railroad with the CV retaining trackage rights the CV itself would be leased by the Boston and Maine Railroad B amp M in 1893 3 173 The Cheshire Railroad was acquired in 1890 by the Fitchburg Railroad which was in turn leased by the B amp M in 1900 3 61 The CV canceled its lease of the Rutland Railroad in 1896 3 173 The B amp M and CV ran north south service through Bellows Falls while the B amp M and Rutland collaborated on east west traffic on the Boston Montreal route via Bellows Falls 2 The station building was renovated in 1891 8 9 The second station Edit The REA office during the 1927 floodsOn December 21 1921 much of the station was destroyed by a fire that began in the station s kitchen 10 It was replaced in 1922 23 with a one story brick building on the same site Construction was handled by H Wales Lines of Meriden Connecticut 11 The rectangular building has three polygonal pavilions one each on the sides facing the tracks and a larger seven sided one facing the junction to provide additional interior space The larger pavilion with its panoramic view of the Connecticut River housed a newsstand and restaurant the pavilion facing the CV B amp M line houses the agent s office 2 7 A canopy wrapped around the station building and onto the REA building 7 The new building opened on March 10 1923 12 note 1 The Great Vermont Flood of 1927 left the station under 4 feet 1 2 m of water 2 All passenger service on the Rutland Railroad including the Boston sections of the Green Mountain Flyer and Mount Royal via Bellows Falls ended on June 26 1953 3 44 Freight service on the Rutland Railroad ceased in 1961 three years later the Green Mountain Railroad took over the Rutland Bellows Falls line 3 45 The B amp M discontinued passenger service on the Cheshire on May 18 1958 part of massive service cuts that day 13 3 62 Passenger service to Bellows Falls ended on September 6 1966 when the Montrealer was cut 3 175 The canopy was soon removed 7 Amtrak era Edit Bellows Falls station in 1978Amtrak took over intercity passenger rail service in the United States on May 1 1971 Vermont was not initially served by Amtrak as initial routes were limited to a basic system primarily consisting of intercity routes still in operation at that time 14 32 1972 legislation to add international service resulted in the restoration of the Montrealer on September 29 1972 restoring rail service through Vermont 15 The waiting room was reopened for Amtrak passengers but services like ticketing were not provided the B amp M used the baggage room for storage 7 After the REA ceased operations in the 1970s the Green Mountain Railroad began using the REA office as its freight office it also maintains the station building 7 The Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 16 1982 16 It included three railroad structures as contributing properties the station building the REA office and a circa 1860 Cheshire Railroad freight house which was later demolished around 2000 7 In 1984 the Green Mountain Railroad began operating excursion service from Bellows Falls 2 The Montrealer was suspended north of Springfield Massachusetts on April 6 1987 because of deteriorating track conditions on the B amp M owned section of the CV mainline between Brattleboro and Windsor Vermont as well as the Connecticut River Line in Massachusetts 17 After National Railroad Passenger Corp v Boston amp Maine Corp upheld Amtrak s right to seize the Vermont section and resell it to the CV the Montrealer resumed service on July 18 1989 18 On April 2 1995 the overnight Montrealer was replaced with the daytime Vermonter with its northbound terminus truncated to St Albans The station has been served by the single daily round trip of the Vermonter since then 14 The station was used as a filming location for the 1999 movie The Cider House Rules Writer John Irving commented that Indeed the Bellows Falls train station and its attendant buildings showed all the usual signs of neglect it required only some period automobiles and of course the steam engine and vintage passenger cars to look like St Cloud s Maine in the 1940s 19 In January 2020 the town of Rockingham considered purchasing the poorly maintained station building from the Green Mountain Railroad for 120 000 20 This was soon scaled back to a 12 000 evaluation 21 In March 2020 the town applied for an equally sized federal grant for the evaluation 22 In December 2021 the village Board of Trustees endorsed an application for a federal grant to cover 100 000 of the 250 000 purchase price 23 In March 2022 town voters approved spending 75 000 to purchase the station 24 In April 2022 the town select board approved an application for a 1 8 million federal earmark to partially fund a 4 million renovation planned for 2024 25 25 The town won a 200 000 state grant to be used along with the 75 000 to purchase the station in June 2022 26 Notes Edit Great American Stations and the National Register for Historical Places nomination form wrongly date the fire and station opening to 1922 2 7 References Edit Amtrak Fact Sheet Fiscal Year 2021 State of Vermont PDF Amtrak August 2022 Retrieved September 27 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k Bellows Falls VT BLF Great American Stations Amtrak a b c d e f g h i j k l Lindsell Robert M 2000 The Rail Lines of Northern New England Branch Line Press ISBN 978 0 942147 06 3 Karr Ronald Dale 2017 The Rail Lines of Southern New England 2 ed Branch Line Press p 233 ISBN 978 0 942147 12 4 Harlow Alvin Fay 1946 Steelways of New England Creative Age Press Bellows Falls Town of Rockingham Atlas of Windham County Vermont F W Beers amp Co 1869 via Ward Maps a b c d e f g h Henry Hugh H March 25 1981 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District National Park Service All over the state Burlington Weekly Free Press February 27 1891 p 1 via Newspapers com General Vermont News Burlington Free Press July 17 1891 p 2 via Newspapers com Railroad Station Burns St Albans Weekly Messenger December 29 1921 p 6 Retrieved May 12 2019 via Newspapers com New Union Station Nears Completion Brattleboro Reformer February 15 1923 p 4 Retrieved May 12 2019 via Newspapers com Re Open Station Burlington Free Press March 16 1923 p 2 Retrieved May 12 2019 via Newspapers com Humphrey Thomas J Clark Norton D 1985 Boston s Commuter Rail The First 150 Years Boston Street Railway Association p 89 ISBN 978 0 685 41294 7 a b Solomon Brian 2004 Amtrak Saint Paul Minnesota MBI p 74 ISBN 978 0 7603 1765 5 Thoms William E 1973 Amtrak Revisited The 1972 Amendments to the Rail Passenger Service Act PDF Transportation Law Journal 5 143 National Register Information System Bellows Falls Downtown Historic District 82001706 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 2 2013 Amtrak Suspends a Montreal Train The New York Times May 7 1987 Lavin Carl July 24 1989 Amtrak Journal In New England an Old Friend Is Back on Track The New York Times Irving John 1999 My Movie Business New York Ballantine Books p 121 ISBN 978 0 345 44130 0 Smallheer Susan January 8 2020 Rockingham ponders buying train station Brattleboro Reformer Smallheer Susan January 22 2020 Bellows Falls train station request scaled back Brattleboro Reformer Smallheer Susan March 23 2020 Town to submit train station grant application Brattleboro Reformer Smallheer Susan December 27 2021 Bellows Falls trustees endorse plan to buy train station Brattleboro Reformer Retrieved December 31 2021 Smallheer Susan March 2 2022 Rockingham elects Zimmer Cowan Kibbe Lambert train station purchase cannabis approved Brattleboro Reformer Retrieved March 11 2022 Smallheer Susan April 7 2022 Rockingham approves grant application for Bellows Falls train station project Brattleboro Reformer Retrieved April 19 2022 Smallheer Susan June 20 2022 Rockingham gets first big train station grant Brattleboro Reformer Retrieved June 27 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bellows Falls station Bellows Falls Train Station Redevelopment Project Bellows Falls VT Amtrak Bellows Falls VT Station history at Great American Stations Amtrak Greyhound Bellows Falls Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bellows Falls station amp oldid 1147446648, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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